|
It is perhaps
timely, in the light of the discoveries made in 2003, to reassess the
historical background to Kerkenes. The melding of archaeological evidence
with historical reconstructions is ever full of pitfalls, and the more
so in the present situation in which the primary historical source is
Herodotus. While it is true that there is no certain proof, there is no
good reason to doubt that Kerkenes should indeed be identified with Pteria.
If this identification is accepted the complete destruction would have
been carried out by the hand of Croesus, King of Lydia, in association
with what modern scholars have termed the "Battle of Pteria"
in which, as recounted by Herodotus, neither Croesus nor Cyrus the Great
gained victory. The date of the destruction at Kerkenes cannot, on the
stylistic evidence of the ivory plaque recovered in 1996 as well as other
excavated objects, be much earlier than the date for the fall of the Lydian
capital of Sardis which is traditionally put at 547 BC. A greater difficulty
is the date of the foundation of Kerkenes and the identification of the
founding power.
Earlier interpretations have to be revised or altogether abandoned in
the light of the new textual and archaeological evidence. It is perhaps
helpful, nevertheless, to review the earlier ideas and to examine once
again some aspects that led to their formation. In this respect it is
perhaps salutary to note that excavation has demonstrated the extent of
the shortcomings in interpretation that was almost exclusively dependent
on the observation of features visible on the ground together with the
preliminary results of the Remote Sensing Survey. The inability to understand
correctly the observations and survey data, which perhaps - with hindsight
- owed more than a little to preconceptions concerning the employment
of mud-brick on stone for Iron Age city defences in the Ancient Near East,
and within Anatolia in particular, demonstrates the essential need to
corroborate such interpretations by means of extensive excavation. Examination
of the evidence derived from a combination of survey methods led to the
conclusion that the life of the city was of somewhat shorter duration
than now seems probable. This interpretation was based on two ideas: firstly
that the entire 7km of visible stone defences were merely the base for
a mud-brick wall that had never been built and, secondly the interior
appearance of the city itself which was likewise, it seemed, unfinished.
It thus appeared reasonable that the city on Kerkenes was founded no more
than 50 years before its destruction. If, as still appears highly probable,
Kerkenes is Pteria, it would have been under the sway of the Median Empire
by the time of the treaty between the Medes and the Lydians that followed
the "Battle of the Eclipse" of 585 BC. But, if Pteria really
had such a short life it seemed reasonable to conclude that it was a Median
foundation which would have been established sometime after the fall of
Assyria in 612 BC. This preliminary interpretation was thought to be reinforced
by the fortuitous discovery in the 1996 test excavations of a columned
hall of possibly Iranian type. Later survey and larger scale excavations,
conducted since 2000, have increasingly pointed towards the Anatolian
character of the city, but because the excavated evidence did not immediately
suggest a longer life for the city these results were seen as reflecting
the 'Anatolianisation' of a foreign, namely Median, city. In the course
of the latest, 2003, season it became clear that the successive phases
of monumental architecture at the monumental entrance to the 'Palace Complex'
could hardly be squashed into fifty or less years. That the 2003 excavations
have moved interpretation forward to a point where recognition of Median
influence on a mighty Anatolian city has become a major focus of future
research design demonstrates the inestimable value of the new program
of excavations at Kerkenes which will flesh out the skeleton of the city
plan that has been obtained through a combination of Remote Sensing techniques.
|
|